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Cook, Arthur B.
Zeus: a study in ancient religion (Band 3,1): Zeus god of the dark sky (earthquake, clouds, wind, dew, rain, meteorits): Text and notes — Cambridge, 1940

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.14698#0316

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252 The Daughters of Kekrops

Similarly L. Kjellberg 'Zur Temyoipopla der alten Athener' in Eranos 1909 ix. 164—175
explained the ttttiges as threads of thin bronze or gold twined in the hair and rustling
like an Aeolian harp in the wind. W. Bremer in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. vii. 2124
concludes that they were thin gold leaves sewn on to a fillet or soldered on to a metal
band.

(2) F. Hauser 'Tettix' in the Jahrcsh. d. ocst. arch. Inst.
1906 ix. 75—130 would identify the tettix with the stlengls,
a gold diadem covering the front hair (kroby"los). This hypo-
thesis roused much controversy. An attack by E. Petersen
ib. 1906 ix Beiblatt pp. 77—86 elicited a reply by Hauser
'Tettix n' ib. 1907 x Beiblatt pp. 9—32, and a renewed
attack by Petersen in the Rhein. Mus. 1907 lxii. 540 ff-
called forth a further reply by Hauser 'Tettix III' in the
Jahresh. d. oest. arch. Inst. 1908 xi Beiblatt pp. 87—96-
Another opponent of Hauser was W. Bremer Die Haartracht
des Mannes in archaisch-griechischer Zeit Giessen 1911 P-
60 ff., id. in Pauly—Wissowa Real-Enc. vii. 2121 ff. The
reader is inclined to quote'' Katy-did, ICaty-didu'l,' etc.

(3) Meantime the old view that the Uttigts really were
golden cicalas can claim the support of much archaeological
evidence. H. Schliemann Mycciuc London 1878 p. 176 nos.
259, 260 ( = my fig. 155) illustrated two out of 'ten golden
grasshoppers with chains' from the third shaft-grave: these
he took to be 'ornaments of the breast or hair'; Stais Coll-
Myctnienne: Athene* p. 20 nos. 77, 78 calls them, with less
likelihood, 'des jouets d'enfants.' Sir A. J. Evans, however,
in the Journ. Hell. Stud. 1925 xlv. 55 with fig. 52, 4 points
out that these pendants are 'intended for chrysalises' and
compares a better-marked chrysalis-bead of gold [&• n&'
47 = my fig. 156) found by A. J. B. Wace in a chaml>er;
tomb (no. 518 of the Kalkani cemetery) at Mykenai

Fig. 155. (A. J. B. Wace in The Times Literary Supplement for Oct-

16, 1922 p. 684, id. in The Illustrated London News for FeP;
24, 1923 p. 300 fig. 4, id. 'Chamber Tombs at Mycenae m
Archaeologia 1932 lxxxii. 87 no. 76, 194 pi. 38). L. Step"-1^1
in the Compte-rendu St. Pit. 1877 p. 28 ff. Atlas pi- 15
(= my fig. 157 : scale c. jj, F. Hauser in the Jahresh. d. oes-
arch. Inst. 1906 ix. 89 f. fig. 30) published a small g°
pendant representing the larva of a cicala, which was fo"11
in the fourth barrow of the 'Seven Brothers' group r>e:ir
Temrjuk on the Sea of Azov, a tomb dating from s. V »•
Fig. 156. (E- H> Minns Scythians and Greeks Cambridge 1913 P' V I

M. Rostovtzeff Iranians &> Greeks in South Russia Ox'or
 
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